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Isolation, Biochemical and Genomic Characterization of Glyphosate Tolerant Bacteria to Perform Microbe-Assisted Phytoremediation

The large-scale use of the herbicide glyphosate leads to growing ecotoxicological and human health concerns. Microbe-assisted phytoremediation arises as a good option to remove, contain, or degrade glyphosate from soils and waterbodies, and thus avoid further spreading to non-target areas. To achiev...

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Autores principales: Massot, Francisco, Gkorezis, Panagiotis, Van Hamme, Jonathan, Marino, Damian, Trifunovic, Bojana Spirovic, Vukovic, Gorica, d’Haen, Jan, Pintelon, Isabel, Giulietti, Ana María, Merini, Luciano, Vangronsveld, Jaco, Thijs, Sofie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7840833/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33519737
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.598507
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author Massot, Francisco
Gkorezis, Panagiotis
Van Hamme, Jonathan
Marino, Damian
Trifunovic, Bojana Spirovic
Vukovic, Gorica
d’Haen, Jan
Pintelon, Isabel
Giulietti, Ana María
Merini, Luciano
Vangronsveld, Jaco
Thijs, Sofie
author_facet Massot, Francisco
Gkorezis, Panagiotis
Van Hamme, Jonathan
Marino, Damian
Trifunovic, Bojana Spirovic
Vukovic, Gorica
d’Haen, Jan
Pintelon, Isabel
Giulietti, Ana María
Merini, Luciano
Vangronsveld, Jaco
Thijs, Sofie
author_sort Massot, Francisco
collection PubMed
description The large-scale use of the herbicide glyphosate leads to growing ecotoxicological and human health concerns. Microbe-assisted phytoremediation arises as a good option to remove, contain, or degrade glyphosate from soils and waterbodies, and thus avoid further spreading to non-target areas. To achieve this, availability of plant-colonizing, glyphosate-tolerant and -degrading strains is required and at the same time, it must be linked to plant-microorganism interaction studies focusing on a substantive ability to colonize the roots and degrade or transform the herbicide. In this work, we isolated bacteria from a chronically glyphosate-exposed site in Argentina, evaluated their glyphosate tolerance using the minimum inhibitory concentration assay, their in vitro degradation potential, their plant growth-promotion traits, and performed whole genome sequencing to gain insight into the application of a phytoremediation strategy to remediate glyphosate contaminated agronomic soils. Twenty-four soil and root-associated bacterial strains were isolated. Sixteen could grow using glyphosate as the sole source of phosphorous. As shown in MIC assay, some strains tolerated up to 10000 mg kg(–1) of glyphosate. Most of them also demonstrated a diverse spectrum of in vitro plant growth-promotion traits, confirmed in their genome sequences. Two representative isolates were studied for their root colonization. An isolate of Ochrobactrum haematophilum exhibited different colonization patterns in the rhizoplane compared to an isolate of Rhizobium sp. Both strains were able to metabolize almost 50% of the original glyphosate concentration of 50 mg l(–1) in 9 days. In a microcosms experiment with Lotus corniculatus L, O. haematophilum performed better than Rhizobium, with 97% of glyphosate transformed after 20 days. The results suggest that L. corniculatus in combination with to O. haematophilum can be adopted for phytoremediation of glyphosate on agricultural soils. An effective strategy is presented of linking the experimental data from the isolation of tolerant bacteria with performing plant-bacteria interaction tests to demonstrate positive effects on the removal of glyphosate from soils.
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spelling pubmed-78408332021-01-29 Isolation, Biochemical and Genomic Characterization of Glyphosate Tolerant Bacteria to Perform Microbe-Assisted Phytoremediation Massot, Francisco Gkorezis, Panagiotis Van Hamme, Jonathan Marino, Damian Trifunovic, Bojana Spirovic Vukovic, Gorica d’Haen, Jan Pintelon, Isabel Giulietti, Ana María Merini, Luciano Vangronsveld, Jaco Thijs, Sofie Front Microbiol Microbiology The large-scale use of the herbicide glyphosate leads to growing ecotoxicological and human health concerns. Microbe-assisted phytoremediation arises as a good option to remove, contain, or degrade glyphosate from soils and waterbodies, and thus avoid further spreading to non-target areas. To achieve this, availability of plant-colonizing, glyphosate-tolerant and -degrading strains is required and at the same time, it must be linked to plant-microorganism interaction studies focusing on a substantive ability to colonize the roots and degrade or transform the herbicide. In this work, we isolated bacteria from a chronically glyphosate-exposed site in Argentina, evaluated their glyphosate tolerance using the minimum inhibitory concentration assay, their in vitro degradation potential, their plant growth-promotion traits, and performed whole genome sequencing to gain insight into the application of a phytoremediation strategy to remediate glyphosate contaminated agronomic soils. Twenty-four soil and root-associated bacterial strains were isolated. Sixteen could grow using glyphosate as the sole source of phosphorous. As shown in MIC assay, some strains tolerated up to 10000 mg kg(–1) of glyphosate. Most of them also demonstrated a diverse spectrum of in vitro plant growth-promotion traits, confirmed in their genome sequences. Two representative isolates were studied for their root colonization. An isolate of Ochrobactrum haematophilum exhibited different colonization patterns in the rhizoplane compared to an isolate of Rhizobium sp. Both strains were able to metabolize almost 50% of the original glyphosate concentration of 50 mg l(–1) in 9 days. In a microcosms experiment with Lotus corniculatus L, O. haematophilum performed better than Rhizobium, with 97% of glyphosate transformed after 20 days. The results suggest that L. corniculatus in combination with to O. haematophilum can be adopted for phytoremediation of glyphosate on agricultural soils. An effective strategy is presented of linking the experimental data from the isolation of tolerant bacteria with performing plant-bacteria interaction tests to demonstrate positive effects on the removal of glyphosate from soils. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7840833/ /pubmed/33519737 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.598507 Text en Copyright © 2021 Massot, Gkorezis, Van Hamme, Marino, Trifunovic, Vukovic, d’Haen, Pintelon, Giulietti, Merini, Vangronsveld and Thijs. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Massot, Francisco
Gkorezis, Panagiotis
Van Hamme, Jonathan
Marino, Damian
Trifunovic, Bojana Spirovic
Vukovic, Gorica
d’Haen, Jan
Pintelon, Isabel
Giulietti, Ana María
Merini, Luciano
Vangronsveld, Jaco
Thijs, Sofie
Isolation, Biochemical and Genomic Characterization of Glyphosate Tolerant Bacteria to Perform Microbe-Assisted Phytoremediation
title Isolation, Biochemical and Genomic Characterization of Glyphosate Tolerant Bacteria to Perform Microbe-Assisted Phytoremediation
title_full Isolation, Biochemical and Genomic Characterization of Glyphosate Tolerant Bacteria to Perform Microbe-Assisted Phytoremediation
title_fullStr Isolation, Biochemical and Genomic Characterization of Glyphosate Tolerant Bacteria to Perform Microbe-Assisted Phytoremediation
title_full_unstemmed Isolation, Biochemical and Genomic Characterization of Glyphosate Tolerant Bacteria to Perform Microbe-Assisted Phytoremediation
title_short Isolation, Biochemical and Genomic Characterization of Glyphosate Tolerant Bacteria to Perform Microbe-Assisted Phytoremediation
title_sort isolation, biochemical and genomic characterization of glyphosate tolerant bacteria to perform microbe-assisted phytoremediation
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7840833/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33519737
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.598507
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